The anti-white mania which has gripped contemporary society has been illustrated once again with the news that the University of Arizona Faculty Senate has unanimously opposed the scrapping of Mexican “ethnic studies” as envisioned by that state’s House Bill 2281.

According to a press release issued after the meeting, the UA faculty senate said that the measure to do away with Mexican ethnic studies at schools and universities is “disturbing and distasteful” and “sends the wrong message to Arizona and its students.”

One can only wonder if the UA faculty senate would have been quite so eager to support “European ethnic studies” in the same way.

The UA faculty senate also formally endorsed “Ethnic Studies Week” which will run from October 1–7 and encouraged “all faculties to lend their support and participation by whatever means possible.”

H.B. 2281, also known as the “Ethnic Studies Law,” forbids teaching courses that are “designed primarily for students of a particular ethnic group” or advocating the “overthrow of the U.S. government or resentment toward a race or class of people.”

It effectively banned ethnic studies in Arizona K12 schools, including the Mexican American Studies program that has been in effect in the Tucson Unified School District (TUSD) since 2006.

Mexican activists, led by well-known Chicano activist Prof. Rudy Acuña, who teaches Chicano studies at California State University, Northridge, have launched an official campaign against the law.

Prof. Acuña is author of the provocatively titled Occupied America: A History of Chicanos, which is little more than an anti-white, anti-American tirade in which all the ills affecting Mexico are blamed on the gringos.

He has organized his supporters into an action group called “Save Ethnic Studies” (which of course means “Save Nonwhite Ethnic Studies”) and their legal assault is being led by lawyer Richard Martinez.

“With H.B. 2281, they are trying to take away from us the only program that has shown to have unprecedented success with reaching Latino students,” Mr. Martinez said.

They want to gut us. They want to take away our souls, our heart, our history and our culture,” he added, revealing the overtly racial makeup of the demands.

The American Third Position stands for the maintenance of the European character of America, as envisioned by the Founding Fathers and the Constitution.

While we have in principle no problem with ethnic groups wanting to celebrate their heritage and culture, this should not be done at the expense of the European character of our nation, or at taxpayers’ expense.

In most universities, students are required to take some sort of anti-White indoctrination course. For me, it was a class literally called "diversity".

The class sometimes centered on attacking white identity, claiming that I do not exist, while, at other times, it focused on blaming whites –who suddenly did exist– for all the world's ills.

Ethnic studies is a sort of obverse, where those who aren't American are lumped together as non-whites and pitted against white America.

The consequences of such studies are very real and damaging, but you'd actually have to live in the mess you've created to know as much. Ethnic studies programs amplify the ethnic tension that already exist in most communities, and they often lead to violence (most often against whites).

Unlike neo-cons, we don't think people should be forced to adopt our language, culture, traditions, identity, and way of life. That is also damaging.

But we don't want courses being conducted in our country that teach people to hate us, and we certainly don't want to pay for such programs.

It's a shame how "ethnic" usually means "anti-white", and there's no hope of more harmonious "ethnic native American (gringo) studies" and "ethnic Mexican studies" existing together. We're all victims to this inhuman education system.

About AFP

The American Freedom Party (AFP) is both a political party and activist organization dedicated to the interests vital to the preservation and continuity of ethnic European communities within the United States of America.